ABBY ABINANTI. Abinanti's goal: to help youth who come before her

Transcription

1 ABBY ABINANTI Abinanti's goal: to help youth who come before her Dennis J. Opatrny The Recorder December 17, 2002 A 12-year-old accused of prostitution is almost swallowed up by the chair she is sitting in as San Francisco Superior Court Commissioner Abby Abinanti reads her probation report. The judge notes the child is from Alameda County, which means her case is probably going to become that county's problem. "You intend to send her back?" Abinanti asks the juvenile probation officer. "Have you found a place to send her?" The answer is, not yet. "Try to find a place," the commissioner says, ordering the child to remain in San Francisco custody while the two counties work out where to place her. Abinanti says she has just one goal: to help the kids who come before her. "Like today, we have a prostitute who's in the fifth grade," Abinanti said. "Where am I supposed to send this kid?" Abinanti is presiding over the detention calendar at the Youth Guidance Center, where she must decide what to do with youthful offenders, many of whom have nowhere to go. Her job is probably one of the most difficult for a judge, since she often deals with pre-teens whose families have turned their backs on them. She must punish the child for his or her crime, while looking into the future to decide how to keep the youngster from becoming a habitual criminal. Abinanti laments the limited resources available to her. "The most difficult part of being out here is that people really don't understand juvenile law that well," Abinanti says in an interview. "The city, the county, the state are allowed to neglect children, because they're so invisible. It's painful to watch." 1

2 Abinanti is a Yurok. (She says to call her a Yurok Indian is redundant.) And she uses Indian and Native American interchangeably. Although born in San Francisco, she was raised on a reservation in Humboldt County, and she began her judicial career as a tribal judge in that county. "I did a lot of Indian law," she said. "I did a lot of training in tribal courts all over the country, training judges from other tribes." When Abinanti sits on the bench, she seldom smiles and maintains a severe, no-nonsense expression. "I think her demeanor is austere and she runs a very procedure- and rule-oriented courtroom," said defense attorney David Simerly. "There's nothing wrong with that. It's just something you have to get used to." "There's none or little banter that goes on [in court,]" added Simerly. "It's OK as long as I know what I'm dealing with." George Lazarus is another defense attorney who practices at YGC and has watched Abinanti. He sees a stern but guiding hand. "She can be demanding at times," Lazarus said. "But she's done a tremendous job of holding people -- lawyers, probation officers, families -- accountable." When asked if she agreed that she possessed an "austere demeanor," Abinanti thought for a moment, then didn't deny it. "I don't let [lawyers] eat their oatmeal and drink coffee and that kind of stuff that they used to do [in the courtroom]," she responded. "It is my job to make [the courtroom] conform to what I've been taught is a court of law," she said. "That does not include a lot of behavior that went on previously. People had gotten too relaxed and too informal." Abinanti gives general high marks to the lawyers who practice before her, but she thinks some of their work is misdirected toward only proving innocence rather than seeking forward-looking solutions to delinquency. 2

3 "They pour all their resources into that, as opposed to pouring their resources into... where this person should be sent to be rehabilitated," she said. Abinanti said more and more immigrant children are coming before her charged with selling drugs. She says she is often at a loss about what to do with them. "They're like road kill," she said, meaning they're forgotten and unwanted. "Clearly it's to make money to send home." She says there is no clear-cut sentence for them, since their families are fearful of coming to court to take them home because of their own immigration issues. "Often they'll just leave the kid here until I send the kid back to his country of origin," she said. Assistant District Attorney Franklin Yee has the difficult job of prosecuting young offenders for crimes before a judge who appears more interested in their welfare and future. "I think if there's a doubt, she'll resolve it in the favor of the defendant," Yee said, who conceded his office can sometimes clash with her. "It's usually if our office has taken one position, because we think the law supports our position, then she'll take an opposite position," he said. "That's frustrating," he added. "Then a couple of times I learned that her position was right, and we were wrong." Abinanti recalls the days when there were truancy officers tracking children who were not in the classroom but roamed the streets. "If children are not in school, they're in trouble," she said. "They're either in trouble immediately or in trouble tomorrow, because they have no education. It's heartbreaking." 3

4 RON ALBERS Pam Smith The Recorder May 06, 2003 Commissioner gets top marks in bench quest The misdemeanor offender in Department 30 is flustered. Commissioner Ron Albers tells him to calm down, but when the man claims confusion over what he was supposed to have done, Albers continues the case to give him another chance to prove he's enrolled in first-offender classes, and methodically explains what needs to be done next. "Sometimes things get confusing, but I think now we're all on the same page," Albers reassures him. Albers addresses everyone with courtesy titles, and explains the proceedings -- and his decisions -- in plain English. "Even though somebody has technically violated the law or the terms of their probation, Ron has worked with them to get them back on track, where another judge might think, 'After the third violation, send 'em to jail,'" said solo Douglas Rappaport. Albers said he frequently puts special conditions on a defendant's release. For instance, he may require a homeless person to provide a phone number where they can be called and reminded of court dates. Deputy Public Defender Stephanie Wargo said Albers "has a soft spot for clients" who show they're trying. But "he's very stern about it; he lets them know what will happen if they don't do what they're supposed to do," she added. "It seems to make [them] want to please him." Albers, who twice ran for judge and lost before being appointed commissioner last year, is getting strong marks from both prosecutors and defense attorneys for his courtroom conduct and knowledge of criminal law. "It's difficult to judge how he'll be in a courtroom where there's more substantive issues," Rappaport said. But "I think he has all the prerequisites for becoming a very fine judge." 4

5 He's perceived as even-handed by attorneys who have appeared before him, which some say is notable given he was a public defender for more than 20 years. In that job, he was characterized by former co-workers and trial opponents as an aggressive, dyed-in-the-wool advocate for his clients. Yet Assistant District Attorney Michael Menesini, who leads the DA's misdemeanor trial team, said, "I feel very confident that the people will get a fair hearing before Ron. I have no qualms." "A lot of times public defenders that become judges will overcompensate and become tougher, or even really tough, to show that they're not favoring a defendant," said solo Jeffrey Schwartz. "He's really right down the middle, just really objective." Albers' popularity among attorneys isn't universal, though. At least one lawyer he supervised in the public defender's office has some criticisms, while conceding that both of them are strongwilled people who disagreed on just about everything. "I think as a supervisor he played favorites," said Sheila O'Gara, now a civil attorney at Becherer, Kannett & Schweitzer in Emeryville. He "was, all in all, quite difficult to deal with if you challenged his control in any way." Managers have to make difficult decisions, and they don't usually receive unanimous approval, Albers said. "I have, I believe, always tried to be as fair and professional as I could be in dealing with my management responsibilities." Even O'Gara, though, echoes the compliments of former co-workers and trial opponents regarding Albers' work ethic. "He made me proud as a public defender," working hard for his clients amid maelstroms of office politics," O'Gara said. "I think among the judges he has a reputation as being extremely hard-working and very competent," said Judge Kay Tsenin, who ran against Albers for judge and now supervises the criminal master calendar. Albers has served on the State Bar's Board of Governors and served as chairman of its Commission on Judicial Nominees Evaluation. He was also a founding board member of Bay Area Lawyers for Individual Freedom and a co-founder of the National Lesbian and Gay Law Association. 5

6 In addition to performing the duties of bail commissioner -- reviewing applications for own recognizance and special releases and determining probable cause for felonies -- Albers regularly presides in Department 30, where he ensures that misdemeanor offenders comply with conditions of probation. He's also been a frequent substitute in Department 19, where misdemeanor arraignments and bench warrant returns are reviewed for custody status and assigned to judges for jury trial. Albers has handled some misdemeanor arraignments and misdemeanor legal motions which have been stipulated to by attorneys on both sides, said Judge Carol Yaggy, who beat Albers for an open seat on the bench in "They don't stipulate unless they believe you're going to be fair." Though he has twice aimed for, and missed, a seat on the bench, Albers said he's "totally satisfied" with his role as a commissioner. But "sitting as a superior court judge and having either greater challenges or opportunity would thrill me," he said, pointing out that his predecessor, Newton Lam, was appointed judge after several years as a commissioner. 6

7 MARVIN BAXTER Mike McKee The Recorder May 16, 2006 Marvin Baxter is the no-nonsense justice on the California Supreme Court. He's the guy who draws a bead on attorneys during oral arguments kind of like he's sizing them up then pitches a carefully crafted hypothetical question that often catches them off guard. All the while he arches one eyebrow and maintains what one lawyer calls "an air of skepticism." "He will be remembered for his directness," says Santa Clara University School of Law professor Gerald Uelmen. "I find him to be very precise and very direct." Then there's the Baxter with the dry sense of humor the one Justice Richard Huffman, of San Diego's Fourth District Court of Appeal, once saw crack up a meeting of the state's Judicial Council. Someone idly commented during one discussion, Huffman recalls, that he wouldn't buy into a particular idea until he caught Baxter wearing an earring. While no one was looking Baxter's way, Huffman says, the 66-year-old, ranch-raised justice borrowed a woman's earring and put it on. "He just sat there until somebody noticed it," Huffman says. "Then it became chaos. Marvin Baxter wearing an earring!" Marvin Ray Baxter, whom friends and close acquaintances simply call "Marv," will celebrate 16 years on the Supreme Court on Aug. 28. He's widely regarded as the most down-to-earth of the seven justices and as someone who approaches his job practically, with a common man's feel for what hard work is really all about. His tenure has been marked by a methodical thoughtfulness, court watchers say, that has steadfastly positioned him on the far right of the bench politically and philosophically. Some attorneys, including one who derisively labels Baxter "Johnny-One-Note," say his legacy will be one of an extremely pro-prosecution and pro-business justice. A rural gentleman for whom law and order is paramount. 7

8 "Look at all the criminal cases [he's authored]," says another attorney, Oakland appellate specialist Jon Eisenberg, of counsel to Encino-based Horvitz & Levy. "Not surprisingly, they come down on the side of The People for the most part." Says Wesley Van Winkle, a Berkeley solo practitioner who handles death penalty defense: "He has not been kind to criminal defendants in general or to capital defendants in particular." Baxter's admirers disagree, arguing that his legacy will be as a considerate justice who looks at issues from all angles and calls them the way he sees them. "That type of reasoning from a court's perspective adds balance," says Elwood Lui, a former appellate justice and a partner at Jones Day. "I know he's conservative by nature, but what he does is give that careful analysis and has a genteel approach to lawyers and his colleagues." Daniel Kolkey, a former appellate justice and a partner in Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher's San Francisco office, notes that today's judges, including Baxter, are a product of the laws they must abide by, with legislation such as the Three Strikes law, the One Strike law for rape and long jail terms for firearms violations limiting judicial discretion. "A good judge who follows the law and the intent of the Legislature and the voters," he argues, "is simply doing his job." Kolkey believes Baxter is "one of the anchors of the court, always striking a blow for common sense, fealty to the text of the constitutional or statutory provision at issue and [exercising] judicial restraint." Former State Bar President Anthony Capozzi, an avid Democrat and a longtime Fresno friend, says Baxter is a simple man in the good sense of the word and is true to himself and the law. "He's a conservative, but he believes in the fairness of the system," Capozzi says. "He has an open mind and his decisions, I believe, are moderate." Baxter, who has no plans to leave the court anytime soon, is a somewhat self-effacing man who says he'll just let his opinions "speak for themselves." If he's remembered for anything, he says, he would hope it's "as a thoughtful judge and openminded, working hard and doing as good a job as possible." He also shares the credit for his work with others. 8

9 "So often opinions are viewed as solos when, in fact, they're a chorus of a number of views," Baxter says. "In other words, the process that we follow on the Supreme Court, the front-loading process, by its very nature gets everybody [all seven justices and staff attorneys] involved in producing the opinions. "They are the result of a lot of give and take." Baxter's work ethic and demeanor appear to have been directly shaped by his rural Central Valley upbringing in the small town of Fowler, about 12 miles south of Fresno. He attended racially diverse schools, graduated high school with a class of only about 70 kids and was expected to lend a hand at home. "Certainly growing up in that environment," he says, "you learn to do your chores and our parents expected us to work hard on the ranch, which we did. To that extent, it does have a positive impact." Another longtime Fresno friend, Paul Hokokian, an attorney in the state's Department of Child Support Services who's currently seeking the State Bar presidency, says Baxter should be remembered for putting more than 700 judges on the California bench while serving as former Gov. George Deukmejian's judicial appointments secretary. Many credit him with greatly increasing the number of women and minorities on the court. "You have to look at him as the beginning of diversity in the judicial ranks," Hokokian says. However, Uelmen says a lot of those judges were ex-prosecutors in keeping with Baxter's own philosophy. Uelmen conducted a study a few years ago that showed Baxter favored the prosecution 89 percent of the time. While Uelmen isn't a fan of Baxter's conservative bent, he finds him an honorable fellow and was pleasantly surprised at how he reacted when Uelmen asked him to recuse himself from People v. Mower, 28 Cal.4th 457, in which the court in 2002 provided medicinal marijuana users an affirmative defense. The case had come out of Fresno's Fifth District Court of Appeal on which Baxter's brother-in-law, James Ardaiz, is the presiding justice. "He actually asked the judges' association's ethics committee for an opinion," Uelmen says, "and when they decided he should recuse himself he did. He has recused himself in every case since in which his brother-in-law has participated." 9

10 Over the years, Baxter has authored several significant opinions allowing evidence of a defendant's financial condition for punitive damages (1991's Adams v. Murakami, 54 Cal.3d 105), dealing with the scientific acceptance of DNA analysis (1998's People v. Venegas, 18 Cal.4th 47, and 1999's People v. Soto, 21 Cal.4th 512), maintaining the confidentiality of courtordered mediation sessions (2001's Foxgate Homeowners' Association v. Bramalea California, 26 Cal.4th 1) and invalidating a state law that prohibited convicted felons from profiting off their crimes (2002's Keenan v. Superior Court, 27 Cal.4th 413). But some say he might be best remembered for a ruling he authored just last month Lyle v. Warner Brothers Television Productions, 06 C.D.O.S. 3258, better known as the "Friends" sitcom case. In that decision, Baxter held that sexually coarse and vulgar language is often a necessary part of the creative process. Why would that stand out? "Because," Capozzi says, "it's a high-profile case that deals with the movie industry." Baxter says he doesn't favor any one of his dozens if not hundreds of opinions. But he does enjoy cases dealing with the separation of powers. And he says he's always aware of the fact that his decisions aren't issued in a vacuum, that they'll have an impact on others. "I think we all do [that]," Baxter says about his colleagues. "And that's always an important part of our consideration. It's 'What will the real-life effect be?'" Editor's Note: It's been 10 years since Ronald George became chief justice of the California Supreme Court. The Recorder reflects on his legacy with a series profiling five of the seven justices who have been on the court the longest. 10

11 GAIL BREWSTER BEREOLA Superior Court Judge Gail Brewster Bereola has spearheaded a task force to bring offenders, victims and the community together to help repair the damage caused by crime. By Laura Ernde Daily Journal Staff Writer OAKLAND - There was a time when Alameda County Superior Court Judge Gail Brewster Bereola would scold tardy litigants by saying, "I'm in a wheelchair. If I can come to court, you can too." She doesn't say that anymore. Bereola recognized early on as a judge that her disability doesn't give her a license to impose her personal standards on other people. Being in a wheelchair has, however, opened her eyes. "You become more aware of things, sensitive to things and people," she said. It's one example of what attorneys described as Bereola's careful and deliberate bench style. Bereola, 56, has used a wheelchair for more than 20 years - the result of a plane crash while she was on vacation in Mexico in The accident left her husband and law partner, Emmett G. Hardy Jr., with permanent brain damage. He no longer recognized his wife of six years. Bereola, after much soul-searching and survivor's guilt, divorced him. There was a silver lining to the tragedy. Bereola reconnected with an old flame, Enitan Bereola. The two married and had a daughter, Abigail, who is 17. Bereola continued practicing law after the accident. Just one month after being released from the hospital, she served as co-counsel in a death penalty trial. Seeking to escape the hassles of running a solo law practice, Bereola applied for a job as a commissioner in Alameda County. Less than a year later, Gov. Pete Wilson appointed her to the Municipal Court bench. She was elevated to the Superior Court by unification in In January, she took on her first major civil assignment. The direct calendar assignment means that at any given time she's in charge of about 500 cases from start to finish. On any given day, she could be handling case management conferences, ruling on pre-trial motions or conducting full-blown trials. Attorneys who have been in her courtroom said she's a fair and deliberate jurist whose decisions reflect common sense. 11

12 "She thinks things through," said Gregory Redmon, a Walnut Creek attorney. "It's a good quality to have as a judge instead of just being so focused in on the legal aspects of the case." Redmon recently finished a malicious prosecution trial in Bereola's courtroom, where the jury found that his client was falsely accused of sexual harassment. The parties settled before the punitive damages phase of the trial. Bereola spread the pretrial motions over several weeks, which gave the parties more time to prepare, Redmon said. Bereola said she would like to conduct settlement conferences, but her caseload doesn't permit the time. She sometimes refers litigants to mediation. Attorneys said she gives them time to argue their point. Bereola said it's sometimes a challenge to give lawyers some leeway without holding up the proceedings or keeping jurors waiting. "I may appear relaxed, but internally I'm like, 'Let's get this going,'" she said. Bereola encourages attorneys to give her as much information as possible in advance of a court date because in some cases it will save them a trip to the courthouse if she has everything she needs. Bereola's last civil assignment was more than 10 years ago when she was still on the municipal court. As a superior court judge, Bereola has handled juvenile dependency and delinquency matters as well as adult criminal cases. One of her first jobs out of law school was as a prosecutor in the San Francisco district attorney's office. On the bench, she's held a variety of criminal and juvenile court assignments and one day hopes to try probate. "There's just a part of my nature to try to help people," she said. When she handled a drug court, she said she felt as much like a parent as she did a judge. That passion came through when she talked about her effort to bring restorative justice to Alameda County. Bereola convened a task force in 2008 after seeing a presentation about bringing together victims, offenders and the community to help repair the damage caused by crime. In some places where restorative justice has been tried recidivism has been cut dramatically. She sees it as a way to cure the lack of empathy she saw in some of her young adult offenders. 12

13 Although Bereola briefly stepped down as chair in anticipation of the civil assignment, she chose to return this spring out of concern that the group was grappling with its direction. Fania Davis, co-founder and director of Restorative Justice for Oakland Youth, said Bereola's commitment to the cause has been key. "She took the idea and ran with it," Davis said. "The members of that group really look to her for leadership. She's been a central figure in the gains restorative justice has made in Alameda County." Bereola sees the project as community service for the city where she's lived since Bereola and her nine siblings were raised in San Francisco by a single mother. She earned her bachelor's degree from the University of San Francisco and her law degree from UC Hastings College of the Law. 13

14 THADD A. BLIZZARD Overseeing traffic court provides him with a flurry of activity, but Judge Blizzard has his sights on more intellectual pursuits and an appellate post. By Rebecca Beyer Daily Journal Staff Writer SACRAMENTO - Growing up, Thadd A. Blizzard wanted to be a novelist. He wrote for the literary magazine at his high school and his favorite book was "Moby Dick." Law was something he fell back on after he tried to enter a Ph.D. literature program and was told the program was only accepting as many people as the director felt could be placed in teaching jobs: one. Blizzard decided to go to law school instead, and the decision paid off. After more than 20 years as a litigator and appellate specialist in New York and Sacramento, Blizzard is a Sacramento County Superior Court judge with an eye on the appellate bench. But he didn't give up on literature. During the summers between his years in law school, he earned a master's degree in the field and, later, he did finally enter a Ph.D. program - right after he earned his degree in international law and right before he spent a year in Germany on a fellowship to study German law. "He's got more degrees than a thermometer," said Blizzard's former colleague Joseph S. Genshlea of Weintraub Genshlea Chediak in Sacramento. Firm shareholder Charles L. Post, at whose wedding Blizzard was best man, agreed. "I think if there was a way for him to stay in graduate school until he retired, he would have," Post said. In the end, of course, Blizzard had to make a living. The law was "close enough to my interests in reading and writing," Blizzard recalled recently in his Sacramento chambers. "I had never thought I would be a litigator. I'm more a shy and retiring kind of person. But I found that I actually enjoyed it. I found that a lot of it was handled by research and writing - in preparation." Former colleagues and attorneys who have appeared in front of Blizzard say he has found his calling on the bench and that Blizzard - who has an interview with the Judicial Nominees Evaluation Commission for appellate consideration later this month - would make an excellent appellate justice. For now, Blizzard is the presiding judge of the Carol Miller Justice Center in Sacramento, overseeing traffic, unlawful detainer and small-claims cases. Prior to that, he handled criminal and civil trials. 14

15 "Having him on traffic court is like having Einstein shoveling coal," Genshlea said. "It's a waste of talent." Blizzard said he enjoys his job and appreciates the experience it has provided. "Where else do you get to do 1,000 trials a year," he joked about his current assignment. He said he had learned valuable skills there. "You have to learn to make a decision, to look people in the eye and tell them they're guilty several times a day - that's something; that's useful." Still, Blizzard, 55, said he thinks he is "better-suited" for the appellate court. "I really like digging in and solving the puzzle and having the time to really understand the legal issues," he said. The son of artists, Blizzard moved around a lot as a child. His parents were painters, and his father took jobs teaching at different universities until the family settled in Claremont, just outside Los Angeles. Blizzard graduated from high school early and entered Claremont McKenna College at 16, going straight into law school and Claremont's summer master's degree in literature program when he graduated in He earned his law degree from McGeorge School of Law in 1978 and then spent a year clerking for 1st District Court of Appeal Justice Joseph A. Rattigan. "He was a great judge," he said. "I admired a lot about his approach. He cared very much about his writing." Blizzard said he tries to use some of what he learned from Rattigan on the bench. "He was demanding, but it was because he was so principled he wanted to be fair," he said. "He had high expectations and standards but not at the expense of being fair." In his own courtroom, Blizzard said he often grants motions for rehearing when a party fails to show up so that a case can be decided on the merits rather than with a default judgment. After his clerkship, Blizzard and his wife at the time moved to New York, where she had been admitted into medical school. After earning his degree at New York University School of Law and interviewing with several big firms, he decided instead to stay in school, enrolling in a Ph.D. program in medieval literature at Columbia University. To pay his way, Blizzard worked part-time at a small law firm handling international transactional work. In 1983, he left Columbia with a second master's degree, having completed all the requirements for his doctorate except the dissertation. The next year, he accepted a yearlong fellowship to study German law in Germany. When he returned to New York, Blizzard took a job at a small litigation boutique. While there, he got to try a case involving "The Smurfs" cartoonist Peyo (the pen name of Belgian Pierre 15

16 Culliford) in Los Angeles federal court. Blizzard's firm represented a plaintiff who owned merchandising rights to "The Smurfs" that they claimed another entity had interfered with. Because the cartoons' creator was Belgian, some of the contracts were governed by Belgian law, and Blizzard called upon a Belgian lawyer he'd met in Germany to help on the case, which ultimately settled after three weeks of trial. By 1987, however, Blizzard and his wife, who later divorced, decided they wanted to return to Sacramento to raise their young son and daughter. After living in New York, he said, coming back to California felt like "visiting an amusement park," with the pretty lawns and clean streets. "When my son saw automobiles, he called them taxis," he laughed. "Our car was 'the white taxi.'" Blizzard joined Weintraub and stayed there 22 years until he was appointed by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger to Sacramento County Superior Court in March In 1990, Blizzard became a shareholder and handled - and won - his first solo jury trial, a civil fraud case. "I found out you didn't have to be really flashy or dramatic," he said. "You could just be sort of believable and prepared." At Weintraub, Blizzard handled a variety of cases in litigation and on appeal. "He was very well respected here and generally thought of as the best writer in the place," former colleague Post said. "He was the guy that people brought their hard problems to." On the bench, attorneys who have appeared before Blizzard say the judge takes his time to consider cases. Sid M. Rosenberg of Rosenberg & Link in Sacramento litigated against Blizzard and has represented landlords in unlawful detainer cases before him. He said Blizzard is "particularly conscientious in terms of being prepared for cases." "He hasn't always ruled in my favor, but he tries to explain the decisions he's made," Rosenberg said. "I think he felt it was helpful to not only the litigants but to the attorneys who will have to appear before him again." Ross Bozarth, an Elk Grove attorney at Guenard & Bozarth, tried a civil jury trial before Blizzard earlier this year and said the judge seemed to have a pro-defense orientation but did not let that get in the way of his application of the law. In the personal injury case, Bozarth said Blizzard, in considering the "collateral source rule," told the attorneys he thought the jury should only hear what the insurance company paid for the plaintiff's injuries and not what the medical bills actually were. 16

17 "He said that was his personal belief, but he understood that was not the law," Bozarth said. "That kind of emphasized how conservative he was in that respect." After the trial, in which the jury awarded the plaintiff her full medical bills, Bozarth said Blizzard reduced the amount to what the insurance company actually paid. Bozarth is appealing that ruling. "In fairness to him, I think he followed what he thought the law was," Bozarth said. "I would have liked for him to go my way, but it was certainly within his power and authority to [do what he did]." Bozarth said he would "not hesitate" to return to Blizzard's court. Blizzard said the most challenging part of becoming a judge was "that moment the first time you're on the bench when someone makes an objection and you realize you have to rule on it." As an advocate, he said, he only had to make "intellectually honest" arguments. But as a judge, he has to "get to a comfort level that 'this is the right decision.'" Outside court, Blizzard, whose son and daughter are grown, stays busy. He remarried a woman with two teenage daughters and is the assistant softball coach for their team. He continues to write and is at work on a comic novel. He's also still in school - only this time as a professor, teaching an appellate advocacy class at McGeorge. 17

18 SUZANNE BOLANOS Pam Smith The Recorder September 14, 2004 Judge ends year on the job with mixed reviews After a jury convicted Adam Gasner's client of his second DUI, San Francisco Superior Court Judge Suzanne Bolanos stayed 30 days of jail time, deciding the defendant won't have to serve them -- if he guest teaches economics at Mission High School for a year. Gasner lauds the judge's foray into alternative sentencing. "It's creative thinking, and I think it bodes well for defendants." While the Gasner, Spahr & Larson lawyer gives Bolanos a thumbs-up for thinking outside the box, lawyers' opinions on the judge are mixed, and sometimes contradictory. About a year after her appointment, some attorneys are calling Bolanos cordial, convivial, balanced and a quick learner. On the other hand, some of the public and private defense attorneys interviewed think Bolanos favors prosecutors -- or at least that she used to -- and some suggest her learning curve is particularly steep. A child of immigrant parents from Chile and Peru, Bolanos began her legal career working for the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund, a national Latino civil rights organization. While lobbying for that group on Capitol Hill, she met Sen. Edward Kennedy, D- Mass., who hired her to be a lawyer for a committee he chaired. Today, a couple of photos of Bolanos and Kennedy hang on a wall in her chambers -- alongside some of her with then-vice President Al Gore, for whom she worked as a domestic policy adviser. After a stint as an associate in the litigation group at Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr, Bolanos became a federal prosecutor. Her trial experience as a lawyer was all in federal court, mostly prosecuting drug trafficking and alien smuggling cases and defending the government in civil cases. She worked briefly for the U.S. attorney's Computer Hacking and Intellectual Property unit before her appointment by then-gov. Gray Davis. Bolanos, said to be the first Hispanic woman on the San Francisco bench, says Latino legal groups urged the governor to pick her. She also got recommendations from Kennedy and Gore. "I had a lot of help getting here," she said. 18

19 In her misdemeanor courtroom, Bolanos says she's big on decorum, likes lawyers to brief arguments, and encourages them to negotiate everything. And she "strongly" encourages attorneys to include treatment for any mental health or substance abuse problems when proposing plea bargains or sentences for defendants. The judge also appreciates when lawyers, even private counsel, make it to her chambers by 8:30 a.m. to discuss their cases. Several lawyers praise Bolanos' demeanor, calling her soft-spoken, approachable and personable. "Not only is she polite and nice, she appears to make really good rulings," said defense attorney James Collins. "She's very, very patient and gracious. I give her among the highest marks that I can" for that, said a criminal defense lawyer who has used a peremptory challenge against her. This lawyer, who asked not to be identified, thinks Bolanos favors the prosecution, an opinion based in part on the judge's job history as well as several rulings observed by a colleague. About five months ago, complaints that Bolanos was treating deputy public defenders and their clients unfairly reached a point where Public Defender Jeff Adachi's office used -- briefly -- an unusual blanket peremptory challenge against her. Bolanos asked Judge Mary Wiss, her mentor at the court, to give her some coaching. Bolanos says she makes fairness a priority, examines the law closely, and listens to both sides carefully. While Assistant DA John Delgado said Bolanos doesn't make snap judgments, a private defense lawyer who requested anonymity said the judge makes decisions quickly and can be defensive about them. Bolanos has been fair and sympathetic to clients, the lawyer said. But once her mind is made up, "She'll let you make the record, but she won't necessarily listen to what you say." The judge says she often sticks to her guns because she's thought her decision through carefully, but she'll revisit something if attorneys raise new authorities or facts. Otherwise, she said, "I make sure they have a complete record so they can take it up on appeal." 19

20 Since the public defender's short-lived blanket challenge in April, the "general consensus" in that office is that Bolanos is treating litigants better, said Chief Attorney Teresa Caffese, No. 2 in the PD's office. "The jury's still out on all other matters." Deputies still have to "educate" the judge on basic issues when they arise for the first time, writing briefs on what "should be obvious," Caffese added. "She is trying," she said. "But it's been painful at times to practice in her department." A couple of lawyers who perceived a prosecutorial bent at first say Bolanos seems to have shifted more to the middle. "Recently when I've been before her, she was very balanced," said Paul "Nate" Puri of Puri & Walia, who as a volunteer public defender tried two cases in front of Bolanos last year. And solo Douglas Horngrad said the judge seems to be relying more on her own instincts, "finding her own terra firma." "It's a subtle change," he added. Bolanos says she's made an effort from the very beginning to be open-minded, so she's intrigued by comments that she's changed. Noting that she'd never practiced in a state misdemeanor court, she said, "If there's been any change, it's that I'm feeling more at ease." 20

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